Making CTAs work for both parties usually requires a fair amount of back and forth. Sponsors understandably want to make sure that the study collects as much useful data as possible for the least amount of money in the fastest turnaround. Sites typically want to protect staff’s time and obligations, avoid onerous or unnecessary reporting expectations, maximize the upside for their balance sheet and reputation, and succeed without worrying about pinching pennies or blowing through funding early.
Sites typically want to be thorough in considering all the implications of following the CTA’s exact language over time. A common example is to change words like “must” to “should” and “immediately” to “promptly” for any expectations covering their staff’s responses to a situation—sponsors’ lawyers tend to default to the absolute best level of visibility they can guarantee regardless of the implications for the people conducting the study. On the site’s side, those staff members are typically stretched thin to begin with and (in an AIC especially) torn between competing priorities that involve projects outside of research. Expecting them to drop everything in certain contingencies to fill out a report or notify the sponsor as fast as humanly possible might not make sense.
Another big topic is the recruiting plan. Once the CTA is approved by the IRB and signed, there’s much less flexibility to adjust the channels, tactics, and messages that a site can use to attract patients to the trial, so getting paid down the line is a matter of savvy campaign planning in the negotiation phase. Ensuring that permitted tactics (and budget) support the necessary performance to meet expectations is crucial.
CTAs also detail monitoring expectations. Sponsors negotiate the right to request regular oversight visits, both digitally and in-person, to make sure that study conduct is proceeding according to the exact protocol, and that things like data storage and drug security are on point. These visits can be disruptive to researchers, clinicians, staff, and patients, and sites benefit from being realistic about how much they are willing to do to accommodate monitors (and at what fee level).
Because payment terms are involved, sites will also usually play out different scenarios, like late payments or patient enrollment attrition due to factors outside their control, and ask for contractual language that protects their ability to get paid. One very specific example is late fees for missed payments. Another is format and frequency for billing—recent trends involve sponsors asking for increasingly atomic invoicing, with the effect that capturable fees do not get paid because overworked site staff miss the opportunity to bill for it.